At stores like Target and Walmart, shoppers will no longer sign for credit-card purchases -- and they probably should have stopped years ago

Joe Raedle/Getty ImagesSigning your name ‘serves basically no purpose,’ according to a credit card expert.

Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express have said they will no longer require customers to sign their receipts when they check out at stores.

Chip-enabled technology now does more in the way of fraud protection than signatures.

Companies can still require a signature for purchases, but it “serves basically no purpose,” according to one credit card expert.

Signing for a purchase is no longer a reliable safety measure. In fact, it hasn’t been for years.

“The signature is a relic of the old school credit-card technology,” credit expert John Ulzheimer told Business Insider following the news that the four major credit card companies – Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express – have said they will no longer require customers to sign their receipts when they check out at stores.

“At one time your signature indicated that you agreed to the terms and conditions of your cardholder agreement, which most people never read,” said Ulzheimer, who formerly worked at FICO and Equifax.

“At this point the signature is waste of time and serves basically no purpose,” he said, adding that he’s previously allowed his 10-year-old child to sign for him, or even draw a doodle.

“Even when I do sign the signature pad it looks nothing like my actual signature so there’s no high-tech algorithm running in the background trying to match your signature to whatever you scribbled at the point of sale,” Ulzheimer said. “In the grand scheme of things, you have no liability for credit card fraud anyway so whether you have to sign something or not doesn’t really mean anything.”

While retailers have the option to continue to require signatures, it seems that few major companies will do so, reported Business Insider’s Kate Taylor. Target plans to eliminate the requirement this month, according to The Times, while a Walmart spokesman called signatures “worthless” and said the company would also stop requiring them.

EMV chip technology now does more in the way of fraud protection than signatures did in recent years. Though the United States only adopted microchip technology around 2015, years behind Europe and Asia, it’s taken hold quickly. Data released last December by Visa shows merchants who offered EMV transactions saw a 66% decline in counterfeit fraud. And just under two-thirds of all US Visa cards, or 463 million cards, had chips by the end of September 2017.